Headmaster Regal

January 17, 2011 11:07 AM
David Regal was more than excited to start his career in the administration aspect of an educational institution. The sixty-year old man had been a Transfiguration professor for the last thirty-five years of his life, and even when he absolutely loved educating the young ones, there was a time in every man’s life that a radical change was needed. For the native Scottish, this was it. His two sons were already married, building a life with their new families and his wife was used to his long absences due to his previous job. Being the new Headmaster of Sonora would not change his life, just his responsibilities, and he was more than ready to take them. His wife had taken rather well the changes in his life, especially since the pay raise would give her more economical liberties. For him, it was a way of giving her a better chance of recuperating the life of luxuries that she had left behind when they got married and left England for the United States.

Months before the actual start of term, the new appointed Headmaster had spent a lot of time learning from Sadi about how Sonora worked. It had been nice of Sadi to show him the ropes, especially with her illness and how it had affected her. Some days it seemed that she was about to collapse of tiredness. It sadden him to see her like that, nobody should suffer through such a horrible illness. But alas, that was life, and he hoped researchers would find a cure for it. That was no way to live life, it also had made him see that life was fickle and it could change for the worse in an instant. Another of the reasons he was glad he had taken the job. It was never too late to start new endeavors, and at his 60 years old, he still felt pretty young. He was halfway through his life; one had to love how magic extended one’s life in comparison to the Muggles. More time to do what you wanted.

The dark-haired man Apparated to Sonora the morning of the new start of term, it was exciting. The 60-year old had brown hair marred by grey; it was hard to decide whether he was still brown-haired or completely grey-haired, both colors were prominent on his head. The Headmaster was smartly dressed for this joyous occasion, robes of the deepest blue pressed to perfection by his wife Addison. He had talked with his staff for a few minutes before walking through the extensive grounds of the school. When it was time for the students to arrive at the school, he promptly made his way back. Fortunately, he was in the Cascade Hall before anyone entered.

Once the older students settled down, and the first-years waited to be sorted, David addressed the Hall. “Welcome to Sonora! I am Professor David Regal, the new Headmaster. Headmistress Powell will be missed since she was an extraordinary Head,” his voice was solemn and serious. He had great respect for Sadi.

David had been happy to see that Donovan Cohen was employed at the school. He knew the man, and since he hadn’t spoken with his staff about the Deputy Head position, he asked for his help and appointed him Deputy Head for the time being. “First years, Professor Cohen will hand you a goblet. Please drink from it so you can be sorted accordingly.” David was excited about this part of the Opening Feast, since he wanted to see how the potion would affect the first-years skins. Sadi had told him that their skin would change into the color of the chosen house: deep red for Crotalus, blue for Aladren, sunshine yellow for Teppenpaw and muddy brown for Pecari.

Once the newly sorted first-years found seats with their housemates, David continued with his address to the school. “Before the feast can begin, I have a few announcements,” he took a deep breath and continued to talk, “Congratulations to our New Head Boy and Girl, Daniel Nash II of Aladren and Charlotte Abbott of Crotalus.” David clapped as they came to receive their badges. “Now let’s have a round of applause for the new Prefects! Edmond Carey of Aladren, Andrew Duell of Teppenpaw, Marissa Stephenson of Crotalus and Jose Hernandez of Pecari.” Again, he clapped before handing them their badges. He smiled at everyone, he didn’t know them, but was proud of them nonetheless.

“I am almost finished. Don’t fret,” David chuckled before finishing with his address. “Thanks to the generous donations of some families, you will be able to enjoy a new room designed to help cultivate your different talents, as well as to provide a place where you can escape for a while from your studies. Though, remember that you are here to learn! The room is still under construction, when it is finally ready we will have an appropriate inauguration.” The new Headmaster grinned. “The final announcements of the evening consist on letting you know that Professor Cohen will be the Deputy Headmaster until further notice, Andreas Stravinos will substitute the Astronomy class, and we have a new Librarian, Miss DiAnna Diaz.” He clapped for them and smiled at everyone.

“Let the Opening Feast begin!” when he uttered those words, the tables were instantly filled with food, it smelled delicious. Now that everyone started eating and chatting, he sat down and exhaled. His first Opening Feast had been a success, in his very humble opinion.

OOC: Welcome First-years! Please refrain from posting on other boards until your Head of House posts his/her welcoming speech! Otherwise, have fun!
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0 Headmaster Regal Opening Feast 0 Headmaster Regal 1 5


Raines Bradley

January 22, 2011 8:14 PM
This was, Raines decided, what going mad felt like. In Hell.

He had always felt as if people were watching his every move, waiting for him to make a mistake, to do something they could exploit to ruin his reputation and humiliate him, but he had always been grimly sure of his ability to keep them from succeeding. Their eyes made him nervous, they always had, but now, they almost seemed to burn him. It was an effort to force himself to keep walking past the seat at the Crotalus table closest to the door, up to a respectable position which highlighted his right to a prominent place in the House without stepping on the toes of the senior students of quality in the House. What existed of them.

His family had gone through scandals before. Many times. Especially if one, as Raines did, considered his family to be his mother’s family, not his father’s. The Raines family seemed to have a new drama every few years, and even when they didn’t, the old ones came up again for discussion every time Catherine did something to draw attention to herself, like get married or have children or start throwing parties of her own instead of remaining under the supervision and control of her mother and mother-in-law. Never before, though, had such a scandal impacted Raines directly, and he had no idea how to handle the situation.

His older sister had been disowned, which meant, in the pureblood community, people would offer him condolences over Anna’s death to his face while gossiping about what she’d been thinking and what she was doing now behind his back, and saying things about their family and how they should have been able to keep her better in line. The polite ones would, anyway, and he would know what they were saying behind his back, but there wouldn’t be anything he could do about it, and he was sure it was going to drive him crazy. The rude, honest ones, if there were any, would almost be better. Under some circumstances, he might actually be able to hex them, and that would be a huge relief. It had been all he could do to refrain from trying to blow the house up since Anna died; taking it all out on someone deserving wouldn’t fix anything, but it would make him feel better.

He barely listened to the new headmaster’s speech, preoccupied as he was with appearing calm and all right, and only just registered that Stephenson was the new prefect. It was a shame, a Muggleborn getting that position when there was a pureblood in her year, but even he could see that giving Jethro Smythe a badge would be a disaster. Once the food appeared, he served himself turkey in the hopes it would knock him out cold, then filled out the rest of the plate to avoid looking strange. Then, he did what he had to do.

“Good evening,” he said civilly, making eye contact with another student.
0 Raines Bradley We are all fine here. No exceptions permitted. 155 Raines Bradley 0 5


Jethro Smythe

January 25, 2011 3:46 AM
Year by year, Jethro was realizing that as he got older, he understood less about what was going on around him, not more, as one would have logically predicted. Take this summer, for example. His cousin Amelia had gotten married, which Jethro had thought was going to happen after his cousin Cecily got married. But Cecily didn't get married - in fact she'd disappeared, and nobody was telling Jethro where she'd gone. Then he himself hadn't been invited to Amelia's wedding, but his sister Cynthia had, and that almost hurt. The fifth year wasn't under any delusion that Amelia liked him - as she'd told him on so many occasions, nobody liked him - but if he was having a party then he would have invited her. It wasn't like he'd have been any trouble.

As for the rest of his family, his parents and Cynthia, they seemed to have stopped talking to him altogether. Cynthia had, as usual, packed his school bag for him, and labelled his potions kit up ready for classes, and begged him to pass at least one of his CATs this year.He told her he would try. Other than that he hadn't seen her - he thought she was working, but she didn't have a job, so he couldn't conceive what she was working on. Every time he tried asking she'd told him to go away, so he'd stopped bothering with that after a while. His parents hadn't changed, but then why would they? They'd been the same his whole life thus far, his father trying to hide his disappointment and his mother simply pleased that 'at least he's a nice looking boy,' and therefore Jethro had no reason to suspect they would alter their behavior.

The one thing he had been able to conclusively understand, was that he would be going back to Sonora this year with only Dana for company, which didn't of course mean they would literally be the only two students in school, but rather that she would be the only person from his family there this year, unlike previous years when Jethro had been seriously outnumbered by the sheer volume of older female relatives not just in the school but in his House. Dana was nice. She had never told him to go away or that he was stupid or that nobody liked him. Plus she was in Pecari, and so couldn't see what he was doing when he was in Crotalus. It presented him with a terrific amount of freedom. It was terrifying.

For the first time, Jethro had the option of sitting exactly where he liked at the Crotalus table. Almost by habit he avoided where Cecily had liked to sit, where Amelia sometimes joined her, and sat down without really paying attention to with whom he was sitting. He listened to, but didn't take in, the Headmaster's speech, only vaguely registering that he didn't know this man. By the time it drew to a close, Jethro had become entirely lost in watching a small rainbow created amongst the cascade nearest him. When the food arrived, it was just about the only thing that could draw his attention away. He started and looked to the students nearest, trying to gauge how obvious it had been that he wasn't paying attention. Making eye contact with one of them, Jethro was greeted by a 'good evening.'

"Good evening," Jethro replied, functioning on automatic response mode until he figured out what was going on. He knew this face, it would only be a moment before his memory bank kicked it sufficiently for identification. Raines Bradley - try not to talk to him. Oh, okay. Perhaps Jethro should have paid more attention to where he sat after all, because he could hardly avoid a conversation now. He'd just have to try not to be too stupid, as usual.
0 Jethro Smythe Where have I heard that before? 146 Jethro Smythe 0 5


Raines Bradley

January 25, 2011 10:48 PM
Odd, how coincidences could work. He had been thinking of Jethro Smythe a moment ago, and now, here Jethro Smythe was, the person who happened to be sitting directly in his line of sight while he got on with Holding Our Heads Up and Still Having Our Dignity and whatever else he’d nodded along politely to his relatives’ gloomy repetitions of.

He wasn’t sure if talking to Jethro was a good thing or not. On one hand, the older Crotalus was a Smythe. Mother’s family was, of course, the greatest in Illinois, but he’d allow the Smythes the honor of being higher in the ranks than Catherine’s husband’s family. Her grandfather-in-law had once been a wireless host, for Merlin’s sake. That wasn’t quite as bad as being an actress, but just because something worse existed didn’t make having that in the recent family background any better. If Catherine’s legitimacy had been even slightly less suspect, he was sure Uncle Charles would have laughed Theo’s father out of the state when he proposed the match.

On the other hand, though, Jethro was….Raines wasn’t sure what Jethro was, just that it wasn’t good. He was in places, but often seemed to not be really aware of his surroundings at all. It was disconce – no, he was going to call something what it was. It was almost creepy, almost, though that wasn’t the right word, either. Maybe it was disconcerting. Unless the poor fellow was one of those Seers whose visions were frequent and had done him damage….

“You have my condolences about the badge,” he said, realizing a second too late that he had not, under his own circumstances, chosen the best word. Now, if Jethro offered the correct apology about his sister, it would sound like Jethro was mocking him, and that possibility made the situation awkward for both of them before anything even happened. Unless, of course, he was dramatically overestimating how much interest the other Illinois families, and Jethro specifically, would take in Ellie Raines’ daughter by someone from some minor little family in Louisiana being disowned when Ellie Raines hadn’t been more than an occasional visitor to their sphere for twenty-five years…"Better luck with Head Boy, I suppose." Who knew, it was possible. Not likely, with Edmond Carey being...Edmond Carey in the same year, but almost anything was possible.
0 Raines Bradley I think I used part of it as a WtS post title once... 155 Raines Bradley 0 5


Jethro

January 31, 2011 2:59 PM
"You have my condolences about the badge," Raines said, and Jethro had no idea at all what he was talking about. He looked at him blankly for what was probably a whole three seconds while he figured out - oh!

"That's quite alright," Jethro replied, pleased to have worked out what badge he was supposed to be grieving. "The prefects are selected on an esoteric notion that serves only to empower those who would otherwise be invisible, or give false credence to an empty struggle to be recognised," he repeated his sister's opinion on the matter. Once she'd explained what it meant, he sort of agreed. But then on the other hand, the staff weren't going to pick... well, him. A little more honestly, he added to Raines, "Besides, I'd be a useless prefect." He didn't sound at all put out by the notion. More responsibility was the exact opposite of what Jethro needed, and there was no shame in that (or so he liked to believe). As for Head Boy... there was actually less chance he'd get that, because he wasn't even one of just two people - there were several other boys in his year who were smarter, more popular, and more responsible. Three of them had just been named prefect. "Thanks for the luck, but it seems unlikely," he said to Raines.

Then, because he was supposed to be avoiding Raines and not saying anything stupid, Jethro began loading his plate with food, instead. He added meat and vegetables, but mostly meat. he was still growing, he needed lots of food. Three full meals a day was just about enough. Most of the time.

Ah, he was still sitting next to Raines. As much as he wanted to help it, Jethro still felt compelled to make light conversation; it's what felt natural. Luckily he could use the existing conversation and didn't have to think of a new one. "But good luck for you getting prefect next year," he said. He thought Raines probably had as good a chance as anyone in that yeargroup.
0 Jethro I'm sure I've seen it in Crotalus on occasion, too 0 Jethro 0 5


Raines

February 02, 2011 6:58 PM
When Jethro suddenly went into a lengthy sentence about why – Raines thought he was following him, but not sure – he didn’t value the prefect’s badge anyway, Raines blinked. This was the only response he could think of that wouldn’t risk propriety, especially since he was one of those pathetic people who sought validation in the form of a prefect’s badge.

And sought it just to keep Bauer from having it, but that was beside the point. Jethro Smythe was speaking coherently, and in a fashion that both (unknowingly?) insulted Raines and established Jethro’s opinion that he was superior to the prefects. All of them. That was not as much a breach of the order of things as his parents’ agreement, early in the summer, before she was disowned, that Anna had finally gotten too old to be allowed to have her own way about getting married had been, but it was still enough to make Raines want to lash out, somehow, so the world would be informed of how very not happy he was with all this change. He couldn’t cope with it. Jethro Smythe was not allowed to do the things he was doing.

” Besides, I'd be a useless prefect. Thanks for the luck, but it seems unlikely."

And then the world resolved itself back into recognizable parameters. Raines relaxed slightly. Jethro’s family must have taught him something to say. Hence the pause, for a few seconds, before he began speaking. Raines felt like an idiot. He should have caught onto these things more quickly, without Jethro having to lapse into honesty.

“Thank you,” Raines said when Jethro offered him luck. He did not need luck, but he decided to accept the offer under the assumption that it was not meant maliciously, with the intent of suggesting that it would only be luck if he made it. He could not descend into complete paranoia. “Did you have an enjoyable summer? I’m afraid I wasn’t able to spend much time in Illinois this year.” Or any, really, and he’d been out of the Louisiana social scene as well, but there was no need for excess words.
0 Raines ...So I had to go look 0 Raines 0 5


Jethro

February 03, 2011 8:31 AM
If Raines had been perceptibly uncomfortable at any point during their conversation about prefects, Jethro would not have noticed, engrossed as he was in his meal. All he knew about prefects was that most people in his family didn't care about such things, because it just wasn't important. Lucas had been prefect, and Ivy had at her other school, but generally most Smythes had gone through school not really being singled out by a badge, and that was just fine. Jethro simply didn't care either way, though if pushed he would claim to be relieved to not have more attention drawn towards him.

Perhaps luckily, Raines soon directed the conversation onto Jethro's summer. He knew he'd have to be careful here, because there were things he wasn't allowed to talk about. "I spent almost the whole summer in Illinois," he said, in opposition to Raines' claim. This was fairly normal so he didn't see any reason not to tell this to Raines, with whom he ought not to be speaking at all - though actually Jethro thought this encounter had gone rather well so far, and Raines didn't seem to be posing any sort of threat. Cynthia probably knew what she was talking about when she'd suggested avoidance though, so he maintained his efforts to not be stupid.

"We went to see Ivy in Louisiana for a couple of days and Dardanius bit my finger," he elaborated on the one occasion he'd left his home state to visit his cousin (technically a second cousin but Cynthia always left the specifics out so Jethro copied her in this manner, as in most others) and her family. He sometimes forgot that Ivy wasn't really a Smythe, and that she never had been, but now she was definitely a Dubois and that's why she lived in Louisianna not Illinois. Jethro had gone to that wedding a couple of years ago, not like the wedding he hadn't gone to this summer. "And Amelia got married," he said, and then cut himself off sharply. He had been about to say that he wasn't invited but that was the sort of stupid thing he wasn't supposed to say, he was sure. He clamped his mouth shut and kept it that way while he thought of something less stupid to say. It didn't occur to him that Raines might already know that Amelia was married, because Jethro himself was never privvy to knowledge of anyone else's affairs. He occasionally caught parts of whispered conversations when the adults forgot he was in the room, but it was never anything substantial enough to be coherent. They were careful not to let him know what was going on in case he opened his mouth at an inopportune moment and ruined the family, as he'd almost done just then.

"It was an enjoyable summer, I suppose, just the same as all the other summers." There had't really been any occaison to make this summer any more or less enjoyable then all those Jethro had experienced in his life so far. "Did you have an enjoyable summer?" Jethro returned the question out of politness.
0 Jethro That's what we call suggestivity 0 Jethro 0 5


Raines

February 12, 2011 11:39 PM
He tried to be discreet about it, but Raines found himself trying to commit to memory every word Jethro said about his summer, even ignoring the pointless detail about someone biting his finger. Hearing about social matters, Raines was sure, would make Mother feel better, and that meant he had to get as much information about them as he could without actually stooping to reading girls’ magazines.

He did have to blink, though, at hearing that “Amelia” was married. That was a very common name – Raines’ maternal grandmother was called Amelia, actually, and he had several cousins on her side named for her, and had often fondly imagined the reason the name was popular even outside the family was because of Amelia Forwynt Raines – but since he was talking to a Smythe who spoke of a specific Amelia familiarly, he had to assume Jethro was talking about Amelia Smythe.

How, even in the state she’d been in since Anna left, could Mother have missed this? She had always followed the Illinois social news religiously, picking up even the smallest details, and this should have caught her attention. The only reason Amelia Smythe was out of school was because her fourth year group had been moved into sixth without going through fifth, which meant she should have still had a year before she was out of school. Mother should have been scandalized, and Raines should have heard all about it. But this was the first he’d heard of it. He’d known their isolation for most of the summer was bad, but not this bad.

He didn’t know, suddenly, if telling Mother what they’d missed would make her feel better.

He had to carry on, though. No mistakes. No messing it up. “Congratulations,” he said to Jethro’s sudden silence and odd look. “I don’t think my parents had heard about that, or I’m sure they would have already sent their best wishes. Who was it she married?”

His expression momentarily soured when he was asked about his own summer. “Not particularly,” he said. Normally, it was polite to lie, but not when the highlight of the summer had been being told to write his sister off as dead. Saying he’d had a wonderful time after that happened would come across as very vulgar if it got out, even if it was originally only said to Jethro Smythe. They were at the Crotalus table. It was never safe to assume that no one was listening to a conversation at the Crotalus table, or that the person one spoke to there might not repeat something out of context later even if no one else had listened in. “We lost my older sister. She chose to leave the family.” He forced himself to take a bite of his mashed potatoes, even though the sight of them made him feel nauseous. “We have to carry on, though. It’s what Anna would have wanted.”
0 Raines Well, I bow to your conspiracy's expertise 0 Raines 0 5


Jethro

March 02, 2011 5:07 AM
Raines congratulated Jethro, and it was only because he added further comment that the fifth year was able to work out that he was referring to Amelia's wedding itself, not the fact that Jethro had managed to stay silent on the part about him not being invited. He nodded to acknowledge the felicitations and decided that if Amelia's wedding had been published in a paper or magazine, even if it was a small article in the sort of publication only read by women, Jethro was probably allowed to discuss important details, such as the identity of the groom. "She is married to Ian Grimm," Jethro replied. He wasn't sure how he felt about Ian as a person - they hadn't interacted much, and although ian had never called him stupid or been rude at all, really, he wasn't exactly friendly, either. Cynthia said it was a good match because Ian would receive a substantial inheritence and the Grimm's held dirt on just about every important family out there, so it could only help to have them on their side. Jethro thought it was a good match because the husband and wife actually seemed to like each other, and while he knew that nobody thought that was important, he had noticed that people who liked each other got along better. He had kept this particular observation to himself.

Reciprocating by talking about his own summer, Raines surprised Jethro by admitting that he hadn' had an enjoyable time. people rarely said such things. However, as Raines went on to explain that his sister had decided to leave the family (and he made the assumption that it wasn't through marriage and was therefore a Bad Thing) Jethro supposed he could forgive the less traditional reply. "We have to carry on, though. It’s what Anna would have wanted."

Jethro nodded again, not being entirely sure who Anna was. His first thought was that it was the recently estranged sister, but then why would Raines care what she wanted? "I'm sorry to hear that," Jethro said. He thought it was an appropriate response - he knew he would be sad if Cynthia left the family, but then he was fairly sure she would never do something like that. Sometimes it seemed like all she cared about was the family. He didn't really know what else to say to Raines, though, so he went back to silently eating his meal. He wasn't supposed to be talking to the younger boy, anyway.
0 Jethro It is receptive of your consideration 0 Jethro 0 5